Reporters
in sentence
270 examples of Reporters in a sentence
Armenia frequently sees skinheads attacking
reporters
covering opposition rallies and once severely beating a leading opposition politician.
The editor of the Daily Graphic supported my organization, and I held training sessions for his newspaper's
reporters
and editors.
Few foreign journalists venture in – it is too difficult and too dangerous for them to work inside the country – and local
reporters
are harassed by the authorities.
Second,
reporters
have a responsibility to their audiences to analyze what powerful actors are doing, rather than what they are saying.
In a sense, reporters’ behavior is merely a symptom of an editorial pathology.
He was arrested after complaining to foreign reporters, and has since been administered medicine and forced to undergo electric shock therapy.
For close followers of the Syrian conflict, tracking key
reporters
and opposition representatives on Twitter can be a surreal experience.
Unlike Cristina Kirchner, who gave long-winded speeches but held no press conferences and took no questions from journalists, Macri answered queries until
reporters
had none left.
In a particularly egregious case, an official newspaper in Liaoning province dispatched
reporters
disguised as students to college classrooms to catch professors criticizing the regime.
So what possessed the 19-year-old Brazilian male who told reporters: “We don’t need the World Cup.
According to Ecuadorian journalists, government officials often refuse to speak to
reporters
because they know that, should a story about them appear, they can simply force the outlet to publish a long, unedited statement of their own.
What we have found is shocking: for every ten
reporters
killed, nine died while on assignment in their home country.
The taciturn statesman not only refused to bring
reporters
along on his plane (breaking with decades of precedent); he provided only brief public statements that do not paint a particularly detailed or comprehensive picture.
This is an expression used with great regularity among top finance
reporters
(though not, for example, by Bloomberg/BusinessWeek, which has long been much more careful on this point).
For example, in early February 2004, the then Chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers, N. Gregory Mankiw, spent some time trying to explain the issues surrounding “outsourcing” to America’s elite political news
reporters.
Greg Mankiw thought a bunch of
reporters
were coming to talk to him about the state of the economy and the analysis made by the Council of Economic Advisers in its “2004 Economic Report of the President.”
But the last thing the
reporters
wanted to do was to convey a thumbnail summary of Mankiw’s analysis of outsourcing.
The problem is that conveying accurate information about the economy is far down the list of priorities for normal news
reporters.
Whistle blowers would not be silenced,
reporters
investigated bad corporate actors, and investors were held accountable for their choices (leading them to act like Norway’s wealth fund).
Reporters
have gained more knowledge and more outlets to share their stories, including social media.
In those days, editors, reporters, and columnists played a cat-and-mouse game with the authorities, resorting to satire, humor, or metaphor.
It was bizarre to see Abramson, a top investigative reporter whose task was to help
reporters
get the story against many obstacles, be castigated as “peremptory,” aggressive, tough, and “sharp”-tempered.
When Al Jazeera
reporters
interviewed Osama bin Laden and the station broadcast his videos, America’s gloves came off.
But he refused, even under direct questioning by reporters, to reveal an exact date.
Other citizen
reporters
in Tahrir Square – and virtually anyone with a cell phone could become one – noted that the masses of women involved in the protests were demographically inclusive.
Investigative journalism is branded unpatriotic, and
reporters
who challenge official policies, as Sheremet did every day, are threatened, harassed, or placed under surveillance.
A few NGO’s and some brave Russian and Western
reporters
have witnessed countless crimes.
The assembled
reporters
will look at him, and they will recall that when he was offered an unbelievably good financial deal, he was too “dopey” to take advantage of it.
On Wednesday, Duterte told
reporters
what he would say if Trump broached the topic: “Lay off.”
He also understands, as few US
reporters
do, how similar legislation has been used to terrorize and intimidate
reporters
in other countries.
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